abut the third time you do it you will have become an expert. Not joking. If you can find your mouth with a spoon full of mashed potatoes in a brightly lit room with at least one mirror, you can hand sharpen mower blades.I don't trust myself with a grinder
You are mentally imbalanced lad... I despise mowing grass, why I keep enroaching on my rental backyards with my hayfields.Retirement gig, plus I really enjoy cutting grass. I mow 18 rural lawns within a 1/2 mile radius of my house.
YepI take it you got that 60" deck, right? That's the problem with Massey's deck, I could never find alternate blades for it either. Other problem is that you can't mulch with it (even if you were able to find mulching blades for it).
They appear to be unique to the 60" Massey deck.so is it the length or shape that makes them proprietary? so much aftermarket out there
sounds expensive

Yeh but even with mulching blades, the deck design won't allow for effective mulching. That deck is built for side discharge only, that's why it's got the open channel on the front there.Yep
They appear to be unique to the 60" Massey deck.
I did all the kind of measuring and looking thinking I could get find something. I was hoping to find mulching blades.
There are a lot of factors, the biggest one being the difference is height between the center where it attaches to the spindle and the blades combined with the center hole and blade length.
View attachment 752008

I was hoping for a set of gator blades or similar. While not exactly "mulching" they do produce a finer chop even with the side discharge. Plus they were cheaper and lasted longer than the oem blades for the JD.Yeh but even with mulching blades, the deck design won't allow for effective mulching. That deck is built for side discharge only, that's why it's got the open channel on the front there.
View attachment 752066
Decks that allow for mulching (with blocked chute or otherwise) are baffled on both sides with an open channel running down the middle toward the chute. And dedicated mulching decks (Massey has one) are fully baffled with no open channel at all.
love them pferds~!!!grinding discs
Yeh gators are great, I hear ya on that. I got them on my Bradley right now, they're great year round.I was hoping for a set of gator blades or similar. While not exactly "mulching" they do produce a finer chop even with the side discharge. Plus they were cheaper and lasted longer than the oem blades for the JD.
Where did you get the wheels for standing up the deck? They are wider and the wheels are larger than the set I have, looks a lot more stable.
Also, thanks for the pic, I like how the guide wheels are stored and I never thought of that. Much better then my method of tossing them in a corner of the shed for the winter.
Why shouldn’t they be knife sharp?Unless you're cutting heavy turf with sticks and typical debris etc...you should not need to sharpen blades that often...
...It is recommended to have a smooth cutting edge of about 1/16"...they should not be knife sharp...
Because they won't be knife sharp in about 10 minutes and you'll be sharpening the blades every day. There's no way to hold a knife edge cutting grass. Sharp for mower blades is "butter knife sharp" at most.Why shouldn’t they be knife sharp?
This is an undeniable fact.Because they won't be knife sharp in about 10 minutes
As cited before...rotary mower blades create a suction to lift and hold the blades of grass so they can be sheared (cut) off at a standard level...Because they won't be knife sharp in about 10 minutes and you'll be sharpening the blades every day. There's no way to hold a knife edge cutting grass. Sharp for mower blades is "butter knife sharp" at most.
It seems to me the more particular landscapers sharpen blades daily but then they are getting 6-8 hours of mowing time daily as well. I have been told by a few of them that it gives the nicest look to have clean sharp blades - dead sharp blades. A couple I know even stone the blade after sharpening with a grinder.Good to also point out that there are different heights of lift blades: low, medium, hi, super-hi. The higher the lift, the nicer the cut (especially in the summer when the cut height is taller) coz it stands the turf up more. But then the hi and especially super-hi lift blades will also pull up ever branch, sandy soil, etc, which will dull your blades faster.
That's another thing about the oem blades on the Massey deck which I'm not thrilled with, they're low lift blades. I prefer mediums, it's a good compromise.
But anyways, as far anything related to mowing, probably best to just look at what commercial landscapers do, and follow suit. Here's one thing most of them don't do: hassle over the appropriate level of dullness for a freshly sharpened blade lol. I mean come on, this is such splitting hairs bs!
If you got that much junk hiding in your turf to sawtooth your blades, either spend a day cleaning it all up, or mow with a brush hog.
With no spindle failures, it sounds like you have been pretty good, or pretty lucky at balancing your blades. But you can do better than a visual/guess, with a $6 blade balancerIt seems to me the more particular landscapers sharpen blades daily but then they are getting 6-8 hours of mowing time daily as well. I have been told by a few of them that it gives the nicest look to have clean sharp blades - dead sharp blades. A couple I know even stone the blade after sharpening with a grinder.
i prefer a medium lift blade as it is enough to get my grass cut evenly. I Also agree that those high lift blades can pick up a lot of other things that I prefer not to take the chance of throwing out. Not that I have many of those - other than sticks - but I worry about safety and don't like the idea of things getting thrown out the side of a mower.
Balancing I tried on a nail or a screwdriver but I found my detection was not very reliable and just gave up on it. I am just careful to keep both ends visually even and go on without balancing and my 97 lawnmower has never had a spindle issue either.